Elizabethan ActorsFamous Elizabethan actors Edward Alleyn (1566 - 1626) |
| Richard Burbage (1567 - 1619) |
| John Heminge (1556 - 1630) |
| William Rowley (1585 - 1642) |
| Robert Armin (1568 - 1615) |
| Henry Condell (1568 - 1627) |
| William Kempe (1560 - 1603) |
| William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616) |
| Christopher Beeston (1570 - 1638) |
| Nathan Field (1587 - 1619) |
| | Joseph Taylor (1586 - 1652) |
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For Facts and Biography information on all of the above famous Elizabethan Actors please refer to the: Globe Theatre Actors Elizabethan actors and the Amphitheaters The huge amphitheaters such as the Globe Theater were built on a similar design to the great Roman arena's. This helped to give the theater a more acceptable reputation by drawing comparisons to the great classic plays of the Greeks and Romans. The sheer size of the amphitheatres drew in the audiences and the cash. They were built in a lavish style and provided exciting visual effects, using ropes for flying entrances, trap doors for surprising entrances and exits. There was a constant demand for new plays and a high turnover of different plays. There was little time for rehearsals. There was one problem with the Elizabethan amphitheater - it was open to the elements and therefore only suitable for winter performances. It was not long before enclosed theaters were built - the playhouses. Elizabethan actors and the Playhouses The playhouses provided Elizabethan actors with enclosed venues so they were able to stage plays in the winter as well as the summer - more money. The downturn to the popularity of the plays and the crowds that they attracted were the frequent outbreaks of the Bubonic Plague. When there was such an outbreak the theaters were closed down. The Elizabethan Actors often left the towns for the comparative safety of the country in these frightening periods. Elizabethan Actors - the Female Roles During the Elizabethan era only men were allowed to act in the theatre until 1660 - it was judged to be unseemly for a woman to undertake such a role. Young boys were therefore hired to act in the female roles. The white make-up used by young male Elizabethan actors was lead based and highly poisonous. The young boy actors were therefore very unhealthy, had unpleasant facial skin diseases and a high proportion actually died of lead poisoning. The Theatrical Costumes worn by Elizabethan Actors Elizabethan clothing of the Upper Class was sumptuous. The materials were luxurious and covered a whole variety of colors. Due to the Statutes of Apparel (The Sumptuary Laws ) ordinary Elizabethans were not able to wear the latest fashions. Fashionable clothes would only be seen at a distance, when wealthy nobles or Royalty were in view. Elizabethan actors were granted special permission to wear these fine clothes. Costumes in the Elizabethan Theatre would therefore double as a fashion show. All people of the Elizabethan period understood the meaning of different colored clothing - a concept somewhat alien in our modern age. Most of us would recognise that purple had been the color associated with royalty since the days of the Roman Emperors - but nearly every color of clothing had its own meaning during the Elizabethan era. And this meaning was totally understood by the audience. The colors of the costumes therefore conveyed an enormous amount of information as soon as the actor walked on to the stage. The types of materials and fabrics would have had a similar effect. Many of the plays had historical themes featuring the royalty and nobles of the land. As soon as an actor walked on the stage the fabric and color of his clothing would indicate the role of the character he was playing - Elizabethan Nobles and Upper classes wore clothing made of velvets, furs, silks, lace, cottons and taffeta. Interesting Facts and Information about the Elizabethan Theatre and Elizabethan Actors Some interesting facts and information about the Elizabethan Theatre and Elizabethan Actors. |